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      The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395
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      Book

      The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395

      DOI link for The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395

      The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395 book

      The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395

      DOI link for The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395

      The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395 book

      ByMark Hebblewhite
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2017
      eBook Published 11 January 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315616018
      Pages 256
      eBook ISBN 9781315616018
      Subjects CHOICE Recognized Titles, Humanities, Politics & International Relations
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      Hebblewhite, M. (2017). The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315616018

      ABSTRACT

      With The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235–395 Mark Hebblewhite offers the first study solely dedicated to examining the nature of the relationship between the emperor and his army in the politically and militarily volatile later Roman Empire. Bringing together a wide range of available literary, epigraphic and numismatic evidence he demonstrates that emperors of the period considered the army to be the key institution they had to mollify in order to retain power and consequently employed a range of strategies to keep the troops loyal to their cause. Key to these efforts were imperial attempts to project the emperor as a worthy general (imperator) and a generous provider of military pay and benefits. Also important were the honorific and symbolic gestures each emperor made to the army in order to convince them that they and the empire could only prosper under his rule.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |7 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|25 pages

      Dawn of the warrior-emperor

      chapter 2|38 pages

      Advertising military success

      chapter 3|49 pages

      Praemia militiae

      chapter 4|20 pages

      The emperor, the law and disciplina militaris

      chapter 5|40 pages

      Rituals of identity

      chapter 6|35 pages

      Symbols of power

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